Abstract
The imposition of Western law in Hawai‘i extended novel sets of regulation and control on the colonized Native Hawaiians. A primary focus of the law was the control of drinking and the native intoxicant ‘ awa. Using perspectives that emphasize the governing of populations through drinking and drug use, this case study shows how overlapping programs of regulation and prohibition grew out of a racialized discourse about the identity of the colonized and the colonizer. This article contributes to the governmentality literature through a sociological analysis of the complexities of regulation and criminalization.
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